People v. Orande y Chavez
People v. Orande y Chavez
People v. Orande y Chavez
DECISION
CORONA, J :p
CONTRARY TO LAW.
CONTRARY TO LAW.
In Criminal Case No. 97-159186 —
CONTRARY TO LAW.
CONTRARY TO LAW. 2
SO ORDERED. 7
need for such counseling came about after the defilement she suffered in the
hands of appellant. In fact, it was the incidents of rape that caused her
psychological and emotional imbalance which required therapy at the Child
Protection Unit of the Philippine General Hospital.
The alleged inconsistencies and improbabilities in Jessica's testimony
did not discredit her nor reveal any fabrication. Inconsistencies regarding
minor details were attributable to the fact that she was recalling details of
incidents that happened three years before, not to mention the fact that
these details pertained to something she had very little knowledge of, being
then only nine years and three months old when the first rape was
committed. We have consistently ruled that errorless recollection of a
harrowing experience cannot be expected of a witness (a very young one at
that) specially when she is recounting details of an occurrence so
humiliating, so painful and, in this case, so alien as rape. 13
Appellant makes much of the fact that two incidents of rape happened
inside the room where the other children were sleeping. This Court has
repeatedly held that rape can be committed in the same room where other
members of the family are also sleeping, in a house where there are other
occupants or even in places which to many might appear unlikely and high-
risk venues for its commission. 14
Also, the failure of Jessica to cry out for help during the incidents in
question, inspite of the physical proximity of her relatives, or to report to
them what happened, did not at all make her testimony improbable
inasmuch as it is not uncommon for a young girl of tender age to be easily
intimidated into silence and conceal for sometime the violation of her honor,
even by the mildest threat to her life. 15 Besides, Girlie, Jessica's mother, had
a rift with her siblings who lived in the same house and forbade Jessica to
socialize with them. It was likewise highly probable that the strained
relations between Jessica's mother, uncle and aunt prevented Jessica from
confiding it them.
In a number of cases, this Court has likewise ruled that delay, even of
three years, in reporting the crime does not necessarily detract from the
witness' credibility as long as it is satisfactorily explained. 16 Jessica was
threatened by appellant that he would kill her mother and relatives if she
reported the rape. A young girl like Jessica can easily be mesmerized by fear
of bodily harm and, unlike a mature woman, cannot be expected to have the
courage or confidence to immediately report a sexual assault on her,
specially when a death threat hangs over her head. 17
In view of the credible testimony of Jessica, appellant's defenses of
denial and alibi deserve no consideration. These weak defenses cannot
stand against the positive identification and categorical testimony of a rape
victim. 18
SO ORDERED. 19
Such was the only rape incident where the trial court concluded
there was no penetration.
On the other hand, the factual basis for the conviction in Criminal
Case No. 97-159187 in the body of the trial court's decision reads:
The Court is not unaware that Republic Act No. 7659, amending
Article 335 of the Revised Penal Code, has retained the provision
penalizing with reclusion perpetua to death an accused who commits
homicide by reason or on the occasion of an attempted or frustrated
rape. Until Congress sees it fit to define the term frustrated rape and
thereby penalize it, the Court will see its continued usage in the statute
book as being merely a persistent lapse in language. (emphasis ours)
Thus, it was error for the trial court to convict appellant of frustrated
rape. Besides, after a careful review of the records, we find that the rape
was in fact consummated. Jessica initially testified that, although appellant
did not succeed in inserting his penis in her vagina, she felt his sex organ
touch hers and she saw and felt semen come out of his penis and smear her
vagina. 25 In response to the clarificatory questions asked by the prosecutor,
Jessica testified that the appellant was able to slightly penetrate her because
she felt pain and her vagina bled. 26 It has been held that, to be convicted of
rape, there must be convincing and sufficient proof that the penis indeed
touched the labia or slid into the female organ, and not merely stroked the
external surface thereof. 27 Nevertheless, we have also ruled in cases where
penetration is not established that the rape is deemed consummated if the
victim felt pain, or the medico-legal examination finds discoloration in the
inner lips of the vagina, or the labia minora is already gaping with redness,
or the hymenal tags are no longer visible. 28 In the present case, the victim
testified that she felt pain and her vagina bled, indisputable indications of
slight penetration or, at the very least, that the penis indeed touched the
labia and not merely stroked the external surface thereof. Thus, the
appellant should be found guilty of (consummated) rape and not merely
frustrated or attempted rape.
Pursuant to Section 11 of RA 7659 or the Heinous Crimes Law, the
penalty of death is imposed if rape is committed when the victim is under 18
years of age and the offender is the common-law spouse of the parent of the
victim. However, the trial court was correct in not imposing the death
penalty in Criminal Case Nos. 97-159184 and 97-159187 because the
qualifying circumstances of age and relationship of the victim to the
appellant were not alleged in the information. 29 Thus, appellant can only be
convicted of simple rape punishable by reclusion perpetua under Article 335
of the Revised Penal Code. However, in Criminal Case Nos. 97-159185 and
97-159186, the appellant can be convicted of statutory rape also punishable
by reclusion perpetua under Article 335 of the Revised Penal Code inasmuch
as the age of Jessica was alleged in the information 30 and duly proven
during the trial by the presentation of her birth certificate. 31
We award moral damages of P50,000 for each count of rape as moral
damages are automatically awarded to rape victims without need of
pleading or proof. 32 We also award civil indemnity ex delicto of P50,000 for
each count of rape in the light of the ruling that civil indemnity, which is
distinct from moral damages, is mandatory upon the finding of the fact of
rape. 33 We likewise award exemplary damages of P25,000 for each count of
rape consistent with the prevailing jurisprudence on the matter. 34
WHEREFORE, the decision of the Regional Trial Court of Manila,
Branch 18, in Criminal Case Nos. 97-159184 to 87 is AFFIRMED with the
following MODIFICATIONS:
3. Â Records, p. 13.
4. Â Records, p. 33.
6. Â Exhibit C, Records, p. 8.
7. Â Rollo , p. 23.
8. Â Rollo , p. 41.
9. Â People vs. Sabdani , 334 SCRA 498 [2000]; Pag-Ibig Village Association vs.
Angon, 294 SCRA 554 [1998].
11. Â People vs. Clado, 343 SCRA 729 [2000]; People vs. Mariano, 345 SCRA 17
[2000]; People vs. Sancha , 324 SCRA 646 [1998].
13. Â People vs. Bayona, 327 SCRA 190 [2000]; People vs. Calayca, 301 SCRA
192 [1999].
15. Â People vs. Bea, Jr., 306 SCRA 653 [1999]; People vs. Antonio, 336 SCRA
366 [1998].
16. Â People vs. Santos, 368 SCRA 535 [2001]; People vs. Gonzales, 338 SCRA
371 [2000]; People vs. Padil, 318 SCRA 795 [1999].
17. Â People vs. Narido , 316 SCRA 131 [1999]; People vs. Alimon, 257 SCRA 658
[1996].
18. Â People vs. Villaraza , 339 SCRA 666 [2000]; People vs. Ballesteros , 285
SCRA 438 [1998].
23. Â People vs. Aca-Ac, 357 SCRA 373 [2001]; People vs. Quinanola, 306 SCRA
710 [1999]; People vs. Orita , 184 SCRA 105 [1990]:
28. Â Ibid. citing People vs. Villamor, 199 SCRA 472 [1991], People vs. Palicte,
229 SCRA 543 [1994], People vs. Sanchez, 250 SCRA 14 [1995], People vs.
Gabris, 258 SCRA 663 [1996], People vs. Gabayron, 278 SCRA 78 [1997].
29. Â People vs. Mendoza, G.R. Nos. 132923-24, June 6, 2002; People vs.
Gabiana , 338 SCRA 562 [2000]; People vs. Dimapilis, 300 SCRA 279 [1998].
31. Â Exhibit E.
32. Â People vs. Catubig, 363 SCRA 621 [2001]; People vs. Sarmiento , 344
SCRA 345 [2000].
33. Â People vs. Quilatan , 341 SCRA 247 [2000], People vs. Narido , 316 SCRA
131 [1999].
34. Â People vs. Pantanayan, Jr., G.R. Nos. 141189-141202, July 23, 2002.